I would never suggest you eat while driving, but Tyler Kord (author of A Super Upsetting Book About Sandwiches) has designed a sandwich the “perfect road trip sandwich,” and it’s equally great for eating while multi-tasking.

For the most part, multitasking on the iPad is a great addition, but depending on how you use your iPad, the new feature can be more of annoyance than a boon to productivity. OS X Daily reminds us that you can turn it off.

When Google announced Android N, they showed off split-screen multitasking, which lets you use multiple apps at once on the same screen. That was kinda neat, but buried beneath the surface, though, is something even cooler: Freeform windows. Here’s what it looks like in action, and how to try it out yourself.

We talk a lot about time management, but for all our efforts to set aside time to tackle important projects, we miss overlooking one key thing: being able to focus on actually completing them instead of constantly switching tasks.

Chrome: It’s not hard to watch YouTube videos while you do other stuff online: just resize your windows and watch them side by side. But SidePlayer makes it even easier than that. You can watch a YouTube video straight from the page you’re on.

“Multitasking” has become a bad word. Most research says that our brains aren’t truly capable of focusing on multiple things at once, but that doesn’t mean multitasking is evil. If you want to multitask, here’s how to get the most out of it.

Windows only: Games are best when played full screen, but many won't play nice with Alt+Tab in full screen mode—which means you can't look at your browser for a guide or change the music playing in the background. Borderless Gaming fixes that problem.

When you're motivated, the energy makes you run through your task list and do everything. Instead, do one difficult task that will make your life easier when you aren't motivated, says Home Office Hero.

Floating apps give robust multitasking on Android, but the little floating icons to activate them can clutter up your screen. This little trick can give you the full power of these apps without making your screen look messy.

You've heard it before—multitasking actually kills our productivity, so we shouldn't do it. Research suggests, however, that although this is true for about 98% of the population, about 2% of us actually work more efficiently when multitasking.